Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 08, 2024

CBA's 150th Anniversary celebrations conclude with May 10 event at Union Station; tickets still available

If it seems like the Chicago Bar Association has been going on about its 150th Anniversary for some time now, that's because it actuallly has. Special website, special logo (at left)... it's been almost exactly a year since FWIW carried an initial post about the anniversary.

Some readers may be grumbling that this is all too much already. But look at it this way: If you made it to 150, you might want to make a big deal about it, too.

Founded in 1874, CBA has become one of the oldest and most active metropolitan bar associations in the United States. During its 150 years of existence, the CBA has worked diligently to maintain the honor and dignity of the legal profession, cultivate relationships between members, and promote the administration of justice and the public good.

"We take enormous pride in the CBA's legacy of championing justice, building connections, and making an impact in Chicago and throughout Illinois. The CBA continues to lead the legal community by standing for the rule of law, upholding the values of diversity, equity, and inclusion, promoting equitable access to justice, and advocating for the just treatment of all people. It has been my honor to lead this organization during this milestone year," said Ray J. Koenig III, CBA President.

CBA members, community and civic leaders, and legal community members will gather on Friday, May 10, at Union Station’s historic great hall for a grand celebration. In addition to the celebration at Union Station, CBA President Ray J. Koenig will throw out the first pitch at the Chicago White Sox game on May 13 and the Chicago Cubs game on May 21. Earlier this month, Mayor Brandon Johnson, and members of the Chicago City Council, including 4th Ward Alderman Lamont J. Robinson (the CBA Building on S. Plymouth Ct. is located in his ward), honored the Association by passing a resolution to recognize the CBA for this special anniversary.

"As I look back on this wonderful year of celebration, I am reminded of all the fabulous events and activities our 150th Anniversary Committee brought forth for our community," said Judge Nichole Patton, a Co-Chair of the CBA’s 150th Anniversary Committee along with former Executive Director Terry Murphy. "From the Community Legal Fair we hosted with over 40 legal resource organizations, to our Know Your Rights Legal Series with the Chicago and Evanston Libraries to our 5K Impact Day Run/Walk and so much more. I am in awe of all we accomplished this year to engage with our members, inform the public and celebrate the legal community."

Since the CBA’s founding in 1874, the practice of law has undergone many changes. Through these changes, the CBA has continued to be a driving force in reshaping the law, advocating for change, and expanding the availability of legal services.

Championing Justice

Throughout its history, the CBA has been a proponent of a unified, fair, and available state and local court system. It has also worked to provide opportunities for all residents of Illinois and Chicago to have access to justice and the courts:
  • The CBA supported legislation that impacted how the courts interpret matters, such as repealing the Torrens System and abolishing the Rule Against Perpetuities and the Rule in Shelley’s Case. Other legislation created new rights that involved families, children, the environment, public health, liens, human rights, real property, alternative dispute resolution, animal rights, mental health and developmental disabilities, aging, housing, insurance, business organization, business transactions, elections, employment, and education.

  • The CBA was the driving force behind the creation of the nation’s first Juvenile and Family Court, a reform that has helped millions of children.

  • The CBA Committee on Defense of Prisoners was established in 1912. Criminal Court judges appointed volunteer members as defense counsel for indigent defendants. The Committee pre-dated the Cook County Public Defender's Office, established in 1930.

  • In 1948, The Chicago Bar Foundation was formed as the charitable arm of The Chicago Bar Association to improve access to justice for people in need and make the legal system fairer and more efficient for everyone. Through the years, the CBF has developed programs dealing with mortgage foreclosure, eviction, consumer credit, divorce, immigration, and other areas where representation of underserved people was needed.

  • The CBA worked tirelessly for the passage of the Judicial Article of 1964, which established a unified court system, with judges reelected on their records without party labels; a Supreme Court with three justices from Cook County and four from downstate; an Appellate Court; and the creation of the Illinois Courts Commission.
Building Connections

With more than 17,000 members, including attorneys from every practice area of law, state and local judiciaries, law students from across Illinois, and non-lawyers working in the legal industry, the CBA is home to Chicago’s impressive legal community:
  • Through more than 300 CLE offerings, mentorship opportunities, and pro-bono projects, the Association provides resources for attorneys of all ages, equipping them with the skills and knowledge needed to navigate the modern practice of law.

  • With over 100 substantive law committees, CBA members have countless speaking, leadership, and engagement opportunities.

  • The CBA Young Lawyers Section (YLS) encourages young lawyers to collaborate on projects for their community and profession. It provides excellent opportunities for professional growth, community service, and networking to its approximately 9,000 members, which include attorneys in their first ten years of practice and law students.

  • The CBA Law School Ambassador program appoints two to three CBA members to be Ambassadors to the ten Chicago area law schools to engage students at law student activity fairs and serve as a resource for law students’ representatives, law school career directors, and other law school staff.

  • The CBA Leadership Institute is a unique training program that aims to increase leadership skills among excellent lawyers and enhance business development strategies essential for the ever more demanding practice of law. Fourteen young lawyers from Chicago-area law firms participate annually.
Making An Impact

Throughout its history, the CBA has been committed to improving access to justice for people in need, making the legal system fairer and more efficient, and educating the public on our legal system:
  • The CBA has a long history of judicial evaluation, dating from before the turn of the century. To this day, the CBA provides nonpartisan judicial evaluations for candidates seeking to become judges in Cook County, including those seeking a seat on the Illinois Appellate Court and the Circuit Court, as a public service to Cook County voters. The CBA’s judicial ratings, available in English, Spanish, and Polish, are provided to voters so they can cast informed votes for judicial candidates.

  • The CBA provides legal resources, information, and education to the general public through public outreach programs like Law at the Library: a free, monthly, legal information series for Chicago residents in partnership with the Chicago Public Library system; Call-A-Lawyer: A monthly call-in program where the members of the public can call in for free general legal advice and self-help strategies provided by a CBA attorney; and Lawyers in the Classroom: a civic education program where attorney volunteers go into 2nd-8th grade classrooms to help students to understand better the U.S. Constitution, the legal system, and law-related careers.

  • Implemented in January 1940, The CBA’s Lawyer Referral Service was the first of its kind in the United States. It served as a model for referral systems in large cities and continues to serve the public in need of legal advice and representation.
150th Anniversary Celebration

All are invited to join the CBA for the culmination of its 150th Anniversary year at Union Station on May 10. Guests will enjoy hors d’oeuvres and cocktails while mingling and dancing to big band music from the CBA’s Big Barristers Band. A highlight of the evening will be the presentation of a new annual award to CBA Past President and renowned attorney, Robert Clifford. Named in his honor, the Robert A. Clifford Champion of Justice Award will be presented annually to celebrate an outstanding member who champions justice in the Illinois legal community, just as Clifford has done throughout his distinguished career.

"Robert A. Clifford is a Champion of Justice, always embodying the historic underpinnings of our 150-year-old organization," said CBA Immediate Past President Timothy Tomasik. "Bob’s extraordinary professional and charitable accomplishments have benefited the nation, the State of Illinois and Chicago. He is a superior trial lawyer who has always fiercely protected the rule of law by adhering to the highest ethical principles and at all times demonstrated outstanding integrity and character."

Visit here for more information and to purchase tickets: https://www.chicagobar.org/150.

Sponsors of the CBA 150th Anniversary include Clifford Law Offices; Jenner & Block; Tomasik, Kotin, Kasserman; Tully & Associates; Aronberg Goldghen; CBA Insurance Agency; JAMS; ADR Systems; Elrod Friedman LLP; Katten; Taft; Valentine, Austriaco & Bueschel PC; Holland & Knight; Nijman Franzetti LLP; and Laurel and Joel Bellows | David C. Hilliard.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Trial of Socrates to be broadcast May 10 on Lakeshore PBS outlet

Quick question before we get to the plug: In this age of streaming, does the word "broadcast" still have meaning?

Partial answer -- and this does start to ease us into the actual topic of this post -- WYIN, the Lakeshore (NWI) PBS outlet which will carry this presentation of The Trial of Socrates on Friday, May 10, at 9:00 p.m., was available on UHF Channel 56 back in analog days, and presumably still is found on 'channel 56' if one uses a digital converter for one's old analog set.

(There will be a brief pause here while the Millennials and Zoomers in the audience go "huh?")

The forthcoming TV program was filmed at Chicago's Harris Theater in 2023, when it was presented by the National Hellenic Museum. John Kapelos portrayed Socrates.

Kapelos is portrayed in the photograph above, on the right, with one of his defense attorneys, Robert Clifford of Clifford Law Offices PC. Also representing Socrates in the trial were Dan K. Webb, of Winston & Strawn LLP, and Sarah King, of Clifford Law Offices PC. The People of Athens were represented by Patrick Collins, of King & Spalding LLP; Tinos Diamantatos, of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP; and Julie Porter, of Salvatore Prescott Porter & Porter, PLLC. Presiding over the trial were Illinois Supreme Court Justice Joy V. Cummingham, U.S. District Court Judge Jorge Alonzo, and Circuit Court Judges Anthony Kyriakopoulos and Anna H. Demacopoulos. (Demacopoulos retired from the bench after the filming of this trial.) Media personality (and museum trustee) Andrea Darlas served as trustee.

FWIW plugged the event when it was live (and a CLE opportunity) in 2023. Alas, there is no CLE connected with this televised presentation.

The Trial of Socrates will be rebroadcast on Lakeshore PBS on Thursday, June 13, at 9:00 p.m. For more infomration on how to find Lakeshore PBS on your own cable system or streaming devices, click here.

A video trailer for The Trial of Socrates is available for viewing on NHM’s YouTube page. The Trial of Socrates was directed by Brian Kallies and produced by the National Hellenic Museum. The lead sponsors for The Trial of Socrates are The Jaharis Family Foundation, Calamos Investments, and Clifford Law Offices.

Friday, December 15, 2023

Former Greylord Defendant will become a Cook County Judge

Operation Greylord was one of those bright-line events in my career (Wikipedia, FBI links provided for the Millennials and Zoomers who may be unfamiliar). Before Greylord, young attorneys like me could prowl the hallways behind the courtrooms at the Daley Center, deliver courtesy copies, kibbitz with the judges' law clerks (some of whom we knew from school), and sometimes even exchange non-ex parte pleasantries with actual judges. When I did stuff like this, I felt connected (dangerous word choice there, I suppose) -- well, put it this way: Hanging around the chambers hallways, when I could, made me feel a part of the larger legal profession, something more than just a junior associate in a small firm.

After Greylord... well... those of you with young children or grandchildren may be familiar with the Kiboomers video, "The Floor is Lava." I don't know what came first -- there is a Floor is Lava board game, and a TV game show, too -- all I know is that, after Greylord, access to the chambers areas became much more restricted, even for lawyers having business in those courts. Especially for lawyers having business in those courts. Doors were locked. There was no more wandering about. The floor might as well have been lava.

I still think that isolating judges from the lawyers appearing before them was a mistake: The more innocent foot traffic, the more curious eyeballs taking in the sights, the more small talk -- the less opportunity for shenanigans or skulduggery. But no one asked me. Ever.

In addition to indictments against 17 judges, the Greylord investigation resulted in criminal charges against a number of deputy sheriffs, police officers, court clerks, and (according to the linked Wikipedia article, supra) 48 lawyers.

Among these lawyers was Ralph Meczyk.

Meczyk and his one-time law partner pled guilty to federal income tax charges in 1987, according to this Tribune article by Maurice Possley. I'm reprinting large portions of it here:
Two former law firm partners pleaded guilty Monday to federal income tax charges arising from the Operation Greylord investigation of Cook County Circuit Court.

Lebert D. Bastianoni, 48, and Ralph Meczyk, 36, who formerly practiced in their firm, Bastianoni & Meczyk, admitted they failed to report a combined total income of about $35,800 earned in 1980 from their representation of criminal defendants.

Bastianoni... and Meczyk... both pleaded guilty to filing a false partnership income tax return for 1980 and false individual returns for the same year.

Assistant U.S. Atty. Thomas Scorza said that the two men earned $60,700 from their representation of criminal defendants in 1980, which was paid them through cash bond refund checks sent out by the Circuit Court clerk's office. The charges were brought after the Internal Revenue Service conducted a computer analysis of the cash bond refund checks sent to Bastianoni and Meczyk and determined that the defendants had underreported their income.

Meczyk told U.S. District Judge Marvin Aspen that he and Bastianoni had left the Cook County public defender`s office and went into private practice together.

"We had an incredibly horrible bookkeeping system," Meczyk said.

"Because of our sloppiness and our foolishness, I've realized my mistake. I did understate my income."

*   *   *

The men are the 59th and 60th individuals to be convicted on charges stemming from the Greylord investigation....
Meczyk is now unopposed for a 13th Subcircuit seat in the March Democratic primary. No Republican has filed for that seat, so Meczyk is almost certain to win election next November.

Bar evaulations for this year's candidates are not available at this time, and will not be available until much closer to the March primary.

However, this is not the first time Meczyk has sought election to the bench.

He ran for a 12th Subcircuit vacancy in 2014 and participated in the CBA and Alliance evaluations at that time. Meczyk had nearly unanimous favorable ratings then, as FWIW reported.

In fact, Meczyk's only negative evaluation came from the Chicago Council of Lawyers. It read:
Eugene Meczyk was admitted to practice in 1977. He is a sole practitioner. Mr. Meczyk is a highly respected practitioner with substantial litigation experience in complex matters. He is praised for his temperament and his legal ability. Several years ago in a past evaluation, the Council said the following:
“Without further consideration, the Council would find Mr. Meczyk qualified for the bench. The Council is concerned, however, that Mr. Meczyk was convicted for failing to report income on his partnership and tax returns in 1980. He claims that he and his law partner did not keep adequate records and when he filed his tax return in 1981, he underreported the 1980 income. Judge Aspen sentenced him to a 30 day work release program, four years probation, a fine, and 500 hours of community service. He was censured by the ARDC in 1988, and ordered to permit the ARDC or its designee to review his bookkeeping from time to time for up to two years. Mr. Meczyk was pardoned fully and unconditionally by President Bill Clinton in December 2000. The Council as a matter of policy, is unable to find Mr. Meczyk qualified due to his past felony conviction.”
While the current evaluation of Mr. Meczyk establishes that he is still considered to be a good litigator, the Council as a matter of policy, is unable to find him qualified due to his past felony conviction.
I don't know Ralph Meczyk. I don't believe we've ever met. And I do not pretend for one moment to know whether he will be a good judge or a bad one.

What I do know -- or at least what I think I can predict, with a high degree of certainty -- is that someone in the media, here or on the national level, will, at some point in this election cycle, stumble upon the candidacy of Mr. Meczyk and, grabbing onto the Greylord conviction, attempt to frame him as a poster child for all that is wrong and corrupt in Cook County generally and in our court system in particular.

Yes, we have problems in Cook County and with our courts in particular. There are serious people who question whether our state and local governments generally, and some of our elected officials and judges in particular, have become too accommodating toward criminal defendants at the expense of crime victims and society in general.

But a productive discussion on that serious question will not in any way be aided by propping up Mr. Meczyk as a 'horrible example' and bleating nonsense like in Crook County (har, har) they coddle crooks so much, they even make felons into judges.... I think that's totally unfair. Unfair to Mr. Meczyk, who has apparently recovered from a serious blunder to become, in the judgment of his peers, a highly respected practitioner. Unfair, too, to persons who care about serious issues that are derailed and trivialized by carnival barkers spouting snarky slogans.

And, yes, I realize that no one cares what I think fair or unfair.

But I have here attempted to ascertain the available facts on this subject and to lay them out fairly. Will this head off any hullabaloo? Probably not. But I wanted to try anyway.

Friday, June 02, 2023

DuPage County candidates raising funds in Chicago. Is this a thing now? Was it always a thing?

Next Tuesday afternoon, June 6, from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., Tiffany Fordyce, a shareholder at Greenberg Taurig, will host a free Meet and Greet for DuPage County Judge Jennifer Barron.

Well, sort of free.

Donations are welcome.

So welcome, in fact, that, in addition to the $25 "suggested contribution", there are sponsorship levels ($100 - Champion, $500 - Sponsor). (Persons interested in attending have to register for the event. Email Denise Hernandez at hernandezden@gtlaw.com to register or obtain further information.)

Maybe I know about this event because I worked with Judge Barron at a couple of different stops along the way; maybe DuPage County judicial candidates (and, for all I know, Lake and Kane and Will County candidates also) have been raising funds in Chicago since forever.

But, in covering this beat since 2008, I have never once -- not once -- run a notice about a Cook County judicial candidate holding a fundraiser in Naperville or Wheaton.

By the way, pro tip: When mentioning Naperville, it is always best to mention Wheaton also.

I don't think they're as sensitive about it as they used to be but, at one time, Naperville and Wheaton nearly went to war -- I'm talking armed mobs here -- over which would be the DuPage County seat.

Things got so heated, in fact, that it was decided to remove the official DuPage County records to a neutral location.

This turned out be a bad idea, because things got more heated still: The neutral location was Chicago. The year was 1871.

Currier & Ives lithograph obtained from the Chicago Historical Society
So if you're ever asked what two Illinois counties lost their records in the Chicago Fire, now you know the answer. If you win some money with this one, and you want to send me my share, there's a PayPal button in the Sidebar of this site that you can use....

Anyway, getting back to the original question: Do non-Cook County judicial candidates routinely solicit campaign funds in Cook County? Readers, what say you?

FWIW readers know I will run articles about Cook County judicial candidates' fundraisers. Not all campaigns take advantage. But let me make a special plea: If you are raising funds for a Cook County judicial candidate outside Cook County, please be sure to let me know in advance. I really want to run that post....

Thursday, May 11, 2023

Socrates on trial May 22 at the Harris Theater

UPDATE 5/17/23: Per email received, this event now offers one hour of MCLE credit.

Charged with impiety and corrupting the youth of Athens, Socrates will be on trial for his life (again) on Monday, May 22, at the Harris Theater, 205 E. Randolph. The trial begins at 7:00 p.m.; doors open at 6:30.

The National Hellenic Museum is sponsoring the trial. John Kapelos will portray Socrates. Illinois Supreme Court Justice Joy V. Cummingham, U.S. District Court Judge Jorge Alonzo, and Circuit Court Judges Anthony Kyriakopoulos and Anna H. Demacopoulos will preside at the trial.

Representing the City of Athens will be Patrick Collins, Tinos Diamantatos, and Julie Porter. Representing Socrates will be Bob Clifford, Dan Webb, and Sarah King.

Members of the audience and a 12-person jury composed of members of the local media, legal scholars, and the arts will decide the philosopher's fate. Tickets for the trial are $100 each (student tickets are available for $50) and are available at this link.

It may seem easy to assume that Socrates will beat the rap this time, even though, of course, he was condemned to death in 399 B.C. After all, if the perpetrators of TikTok have not been made to quaff the hemlock on account of their corruption of today's youth, surely Socrates should have nothing to fear from a modern jury.

But don't bet on it: When the National Hellenic Museum put Socrates on trial in 2013, Socrates lost.

Plato -- and perhaps our own history teachers in junior high -- may have dangerously oversimplified, even falsified, the case against Socrates. The 'youth' he allegedly corrupted did not do weird dances and post them to the Internet; rather some of Socrates' students, Alcibiades and Critias in particular, were among the Thirty Tyrants who overthrew the Athenian democracy in 411-410 and again in 404-403. I.F. Stone referred to Critias, a cousin of Plato's, as the first Robspierre. A summary of Socrates' trial prepared by University of Missouri-Kansas City Professor Douglas O. Linder says the oligarchy under Critias "confiscated the estates of Athenian aristocrats, banished 5,000 women, children, and slaves, and summarily executed about 1,500 of the most prominent democrats of Athens."

In this 1979 interview (reproduced on Linder's Famous Trials site) charges that Plato (in his Apology) tries to leave the reader with "the impression that this wonderful old philosopher was condemned simply because he had spent his life exhorting his fellow citizens to be virtuous," but that, really, "the charge of corrupting the youth was based on a belief – and considerable evidence – that [Socrates] was undermining their faith in Athenian democracy."

History can be complicated. That's what makes it interesting.

Thursday, March 23, 2023

Why the "Weeping Angels" method of passing legislation works in Illinois -- and what may be done about it

I have here complained, futilely, from time to time, about the breathtaking speed with which significant leglislation zips through the Illinois Leglislature, in the closing hours of a legislative session, in the dead of night, free of all public scrutiny.

I have even offered a case study or two, illustrating the process. This one remains my favorite:
This was how SB 825 began its legislative life before massively mutating into PA 102-0015, a behemoth more than 440 pages long, which (among many other things) moved last year's primary from March to June. And, as laid out in my linked June 3, 2021 article, it almost all happened on May 31 of that year, as the legislative session was ending.

Indeed it seems that this is the only way the General Assembly actually passes major legislation these days.

I was reminded of that unhealthy reality when, earlier this month, I listened to the oral arguments before the Illinois Supreme Court in the SAFE-T Act case, Rowe v. Raoul, No. 129248 (you can find the parties' briefs and more on the Supreme Court's high profile cases page). One of the Appellees' attorneys made a snide, though passing, reference to the fact that the SAFE-T Act was also passed in the dead of night, in the dying moments of the legislative session. It was just a statement of fact, apparently not urged as a grounds for affirmance.

The legislative cognoscenti must chortle when they see well-meant, earnest articles like "How to Support or Oppose a Bill in Illinois," which appeared recently in a BGA newsletter, or the recent article in the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin about pending legislative deadlines. As if any of that stuff matters, they must chuckle, knowing there are any number of shell bills locked and loaded, ready for 100% "amendment" when the time comes.

So how do they get away with this? Why is it allowed?

The bitter and the cynical may see this as just another consequence of one-party rule.

But these late-night, last minute legislative lalapaloozas are entirely unnecessary if merely steamrolling The Other Side is the goal. That's what veto-proof majorities are for.

Nor should anyone think for a nanosecond that The Other Side would not take advantage of the same procedure if the situation were reveresed. If some member of The Other Side could be found, he or she might sputter furiously that they would never do such a thing. But don't be fooled: Using and abusing the levers of power wherever and whenever possible are among the last areas of true, bipartisan agreement. Tactics are only wrong or bad when THEY do it; when WE do it, it's just smart politics. See, e.g., gerrymandering.

It has been ever thus ever since the Optimates and the Populares battled, eventually quite literally, for control in the Roman Republic. There was some precedent, however shaky, in the mos maiorum, the tangled web of myth and history that served as Rome's unwritten constitution, for every office created or abolished, for every prosecution undertaken or thrwarted, and for every increasingly violent outrage perpetrated by The Other Side. Just as there was precedent for every even more violent response to said outrage. This is why the Founding Fathers immersed themselves in Roman history: They were seeking to put the American Republic on a firmer, safer, more lasting footing. More specifically, this is a primary reason why we have written constitutions in this country; it wasn't just the constitutional excesses of King George that animated the Founders, they were also thinking of those committed by Lucius Cornelius Sulla, Gaius Marius, and (of course) Marius' nephew, Julius Caesar. It's a shame we don't study that stuff anymore.

But we do still (allegedly) study constitutions.

And the place to start, when trying to understand why the Weeping Angels method of passing legislation is permitted, is Article IV, Section 8 of the 1970 Illinois Constitution. Section 8 provides:
 (a)  The enacting clause of the laws of this State shall be: "Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, represented in the General Assembly."
 (b) The General Assembly shall enact laws only by bill. Bills may originate in either house, but may be amended or rejected by the other.
 (c) No bill shall become a law without the concurrence of a majority of the members elected to each house. Final passage of a bill shall be by record vote. In the Senate at the request of two members, and in the House at the request of five members, a record vote may be taken on any other occasion. A record vote is a vote by yeas and nays entered on the journal.
 (d) A bill shall be read by title on three different days in each house. A bill and each amendment thereto shall be reproduced and placed on the desk of each member before final passage.
   Bills, except bills for appropriations and for the codification, revision or rearrangement of laws, shall be confined to one subject. Appropriation bills shall be limited to the subject of appropriations.
    A bill expressly amending a law shall set forth completely the sections amended.
    The Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate shall sign each bill that passes both houses to certify that the procedural requirements for passage have been met.
One might think that the first sentence of §8(d) would outlaw the Weeping Angels approach -- a wholly new, mutated bill, one that has gone, say, from a single page to more than 440 pages, could not be read, even by title, on three different days in each house, especially if the 100% amendment and final passage take place on the same day. But then the impact of the last sentence of §8(d) must be considered: "The Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate shall sign each bill that passes both houses to certify that the procedural requirements for passage have been met." Even in cases of obvious disregard for the three-readings rule, once these worthies sign off, is all inquiry into constitutional infirmity foreclosed? Must Illinois indefinitely suffer the Weeping Angels method of passing legislation?

The answer given by the case law -- for now -- is most definitely "yes." But there may be hope for the future.

Let's address the settled law first.

In Benjamin v. Devon Bank, 68 Ill.2d 142 (1977), the Illinois Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of a provision tucked in an appropriations bill that would have prevented funds appropriated by the bill from being used "for the opening and staffing of an Unemployment Insurance, Employment Service or Work Incentive office if the office space or facility rented is located within 500 feet of a school in any city with a population over 1,000,000."

So... this was a provision designed to torpedo the opening of one particular office in one Chicago neighborhood, an office which the State had already leased shortly before the appopriations bill was thus amended. The North Town Community Council and a few of its members sued to enjoin the opening of the office, citing this provision. It was almost as if the whole thing was set up in advance....

The Circuit Court of Cook County held the appropriations act and "particularly" the anti-office-opening provision to be "valid and effective and issued the injunction." (68 Ill.2d at 148.)

On direct appeal, the Supreme Court reversed.

The Court's ultimate reason for reversal was that the office-torpedoing provision [§5.1] "purported to change the existing general substantive law, that it was therefore itself substantive in nature, and could not be included in the appropriation bill" (68 Ill.2d at 148). Section 5.1 was in direct conflict with this sentence of §8(d) of Article IV: "Appropriation bills shall be limited to the subject of appropriations."

But the published opinion represents the Supreme Court's second stab at a disposition. In its original opinion the Court "held that section 5.1 violated section 8(d) of article IV for the reason that it was a restriction on the location of facilities to be used by the Department of Labor and was not limited to the subject of appropriations" (68 Ill.2d at 144). After granting plaintiffs' petition for rehearing, the Supreme Court allowed "a majority of the party leadership of both houses of the General Assembly, the leadership on the appropriations committees, and other concerned members of both houses representing both major political parties" to appear as amici (68 Ill.2d at 144, emphasis mine).

The aggrieved legislators argued that "the 'certification' or 'enrolled bill' provision of article IV, section 8(d) [the last sentence of that provision, quoted above] precludes judicial inquiry concerning compliance with [all] the requirements enumerated in section 8(d)" (68 Ill.2d at 145).

To evaluate this contention, the Supreme Court reviewed the relevant proceedings of the 1970 Constitutional Convention (68 Ill.2d at 145-147). This is the key quotation (68 Ill.2d at 145):
Presently [under the 1870 Constitution] Illinois has the 'journal entry' rule as distinguished from an 'enrolled bill' rule. It is proposed that Illinois adopt the 'enrolled bill' rule.

The 'journal entry' rule means that a piece of legislation can be challenged in the courts by pointing to a defect in its passage as reflected in the journal. Under this rule, a statute [duly] passed by the General Assembly and signed by the Governor may be attacked in the courts, not necessarily on its merits, but on some procedural error or technicality found in the legislative process. The 'journal entry' rule, as a result, leads to complex litigation over procedures and technicalities.

The 'enrolled bill' rule would provide that when the presiding officers of the two houses sign a bill, their signatures become conclusive proof that all constitutional procedures have been properly followed. The 'enrolled bill' rule would not permit a challenge to a bill on procedural or technical grounds regarding the manner of passage if the bill showed on its face that it was properly passed. Signatures by the presiding officers would, of course, constitute proof that proper procedures were followed.
The bipartisan legislative amici argued that §8(d) should be read as five procedural requirements, so that the signatures of the House Speaker and Senate President were sufficient to preclude judicial inquiry on any of those topics.

The Benjamin court, however, noted that Con-Con's Committee on the Legislature did not consider all the requirements of §8(d) to be merely procedural. It quoted the committee's report on the "single subject" rule (68 Ill.2d at 147):
"Since the judicial branch may review challenges that the 'single subject' rule has been violated, both members of the General Assembly and the public retain sufficient protection from a provision in a bill which may be unrelated to the overall thrust of the bill." 6 Proceedings 1386.
The Benjamin court explained that the purpose of the "enrolled bill" rule "is to preclude impeachment of a bill 'certified' in accordance with section 8(d) by use of the Senate and House journals to show legislative noncompliance with constitutionally mandated procedural requirements. Examination of the journals is not necessary, however, to test the General Assembly's compliance with either the "single subject" or the "subject of appropriations" requirement of section 8(d), and we have reviewed statutes to determine legislative compliance with these requirements."

The Supreme Court returned to the "enrolled bill" rule in Polich v. Chicago School Finance Authority, 79 Ill.2d 188 (1980), a rare case which the court accepted as an original action pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 381.

Among the many constitutional defects urged by several objectors to the Legislature's creation of the Chicago School Finance Authority in P.A. 81-1221 was that it "could not, as required by article IV, section 8, of the Constitution, have been read 'on three different days in either house for the reason that it is obvious that it came into existence and 'traversed the whole legislative process in one day, January 11, 1980'" (79 Ill.2d 208-209).

Sound familiar?

The Supreme Court summarized the objectors' complaint on these grounds as follows (79 Ill.2d at 209):
House Bill 1264 [as] filed in March 1979 dealt solely with the retirement age of certain school personnel. It was at that time entitled "An Act to amend the School Code." It was read on three different days in the House, passed the House, and was sent to the Senate. In the Senate it received a first reading and was assigned to committee. On January 9, 1980, the bill was discharged from committee and given its second reading in the Senate. On January 11, 1980, everything but the title and the enacting clause was deleted from House Bill 1264 and the contents of what became Public Act 81-1221 were substituted. On that same date House Bill 1264 was given two readings in the Senate, passed the Senate, and was sent to the House, which passed it as received. Subsequently it was approved by the Governor. Petitioners argue that the foregoing procedure "is such a wilful and gross violation of article IV, section 8(d) that no categorization of these actions as being merely 'procedural' and as somehow absolved by the 'enrolled bill' rule seems adequate under the circumstances."
Quoting the Con-Con proceedings set out in the Benjamin case, the Polich court stated (79 Ill.2d 211-212), "This case is distinguishable from Benjamin in that the alleged defect argued by petitioners would require examination of the Journal, whereas in Benjamin, failure to comply with the constitutional provision was apparent from the face of the bill. The enrolled bill rule is clearly applicable here, and we hold the legislation was properly enacted."

The enrolled bill rule was reaffirmed in People v. Dunigan, 165 Ill.2d 235 (1995) (rejecting a three-readings rule challenge to an habitual criminal statute), and in Geja's Cafe v. Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, 153 Ill.2d 239 (1992) (rejecting a challenge to an amendment to the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority and a tax ordinance enacted by the Authority pursuant to that amendment).

But the Geja's Cafe court fired a warning shot across the Legislature's bow. While the court declined plaintiffs' "persuasive argument" urging the Court to "abandon the enrolled bill doctrine because history has proven that there is no other way to enforce the constitutionally mandated three-readings requirement," the Court also cautioned that, if "the General Assembly continues its poor record of policing itself, we reserve the right to revisit this issue on another day to decide the continued propriety of ignoring this constitutional violation" (153 Ill.2d at 260).

The Geja's Cafe court noted that the Framers of the 1970 Constitution did not anticipate that the Weeping Angels method of passing legislation would become dominant. In Geja's Cafe, the Supreme Court stated that the Framers "enacted the enrolled bill doctrine on the assumption that the General Assembly would police itself and judicial review would not be needed because violations of the constitutionally required procedures would be rare. '[W]e determined, in accordance with many other states that have adopted the enrolled bill rule and have found no difficulties, that * * * if they were to commit any fraud or chicanery, the legislature would certainly take care of them.' 4 Proceedings 2881." However, the Court stated, "it is apparent... that the General Assembly has shown remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself. Indeed, both parties agree that ignoring the three readings requirement has become a procedural regularity." (153 Ill.2d at 260.)

Things have not improved in the subsequent 30 years, as the Supreme Court has, from time to time, noticed.

In Cutinello v. Whitley, 161 Ill.2d 409, 425 (1994), the Court refused to revisit the enrolled bill rule, although requested to do so, because "judicial review of legislative procedure would raise a substantial separation of powers concern." More recently, in Friends of Parks v. Chicago Park District, 203 Ill.2d 312, 786 N.E.2d 161, 171 (2003), the Court stated, "We noted in Geja's Cafe and again in Cutinello that the legislature had shown remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself in regard to the three-readings requirement. [Citations.] The same poor self-discipline is alleged to have occurred in this case. The record below has not, however, been sufficiently developed to support or contradict this claim. Nevertheless, because this court is ever mindful of its duty to enforce the constitution of this state, we take the opportunity to urge the legislature to follow the three-readings rule. While separation of powers concerns militate in favor of the enrolled-bill doctrine (see Cutinello, 161 Ill.2d at 425, 204 Ill.Dec. 136, 641 N.E.2d 360), our responsibility to ensure obedience to the constitution remains an equally important concern."

In Doe v. LYFT, Inc., 2020 IL App (1st) 191328, the Appellate Court was asked to answer two certified questions, namely, "(1) whether section 25(e) [of the Transportation Network Providers Act] exempts ridesharing companies from the heightened duty of care and standard of vicarious liability that apply to common carriers and (2) if so, whether section 25(e) violates the Illinois Constitution's ban on special legislation (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IV, § 13) or whether the Act itself was passed in violation of the Illinois Constitution's three-readings rule (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IV, § 8 (d))" (2020 IL App (1st) 191328, ¶1).

This was anything but an academic inquiry: Plaintiff Doe alleged that she was sexually assaulted by a knife-brandishing Lyft driver who was supposed to be driving her home. But when she sued Lyft, the company moved to dismiss arguing that it had no vicarious liability for the driver's conduct. Doe countered that Lyft could be liable as a common carrier which owed its passengers a heightened and nondelegable duty of care. But Lyft, in reply, invoked §25(e) which "declares that transportation network companies (or TNCs) and their drivers 'are not common carriers, contract carriers or motor carriers, as defined by applicable State law, nor do they provide taxicab or for-hire vehicle service.'" (2020 IL App (1st) 191328, ¶¶3-8.)

Doe noted that the bill that ultimately became the Transportation Network Providers Act began life in the Illinois Senate as "an unrelated bill to amend the Illinois Public Accounting Act." In this guise, SB 2774 sailed through the Senate and thence to the House, where it was read twice. (2020 IL App (1st) 191328, ¶52.) The opinion does not state whether SB 2774 was shelved for any period of time following its second reading in the House or, if so, for how long, but it does say that, after its second reading in the House, SB 2774 was amended by removing everything after the enacting clause and substituting the text of what eventually became the Transportation Network Providers Act. The newly reconstituted SB 2774 was read once more before being passed by the House and then returned to the Senate where it was debated and passed the same day" (2020 IL App (1st) 191328, ¶52, emphasis mine).

The Doe court rejected the three-readings challenge to the constitutionality of §25(e), relying, as it was bound to do, on the enrolled bill rule (2020 IL App (1st) 191328, ¶¶53-55). The Appellate Court noted that the Supreme Court "has lamented the General Assembly's 'remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself in regard to the three-readings requirement' [Citation] and has 'reserve[d] the right to revisit' the enrolled-bill doctrine if the legislature's noncompliance persists [Citation]. Whether that time has come is a question only the supreme court can answer" (2020 IL App (1st) 191328, ¶55). But, the Doe court noted, "Doe has appropriately preserved the issue" for Supreme Court review.

And, for a time, it seemed as if the Supreme Court might be poised to revisit the enrolled bill rule; it accepted a PLA in the Doe case (No. 126605). But the case was settled before the Supreme Court disposed of the appeal.

So the enrolled bill rule still protects Weeping Angels legislation.

But maybe not forever.

Weeping Angels legislation may provide a nifty way to pass bills without pesky scrutiny from the press or public. Maybe, in some cases, this method provides an expedient means to pass socially significant, progressive legislation that might otherwise stall in a contentious legislative process. But the repeated and flagrant violation of the Illinois constitution can only undermine public confidence in the legislature. And courts that continue to countenance these constitutional shenanigans risk a loss of public confidence as well.

Violation of the three readings requirement should be raised as an additional grounds, where applicable, when the validity of any statute is challenged. As for the rest of us, we should at least demand that our elected representatives adhere to the express requirements of the Illinois Constitution that each has sworn to uphold. That shouldn't be too much to ask, right?

Sunday, February 05, 2023

Paczki Day Fundraiser for Polish American Association

The calendar says that, this year, Ash Wednesday, the start of the Christian penitential season of Lent, begins on February 22, the same day on which we commemorate the birth of George Washington.

Except that, under the old Julian calendar, Washington was actually born on February 11. In 1750, under the Calendar (New Style) Act, Britain, and all its colonial possessions, including Virginia, where Washington lived, adopted the Gregorian calendar and Thursday, September 14, 1752 was officially the day after Wednesday, September 2.

To conform with the new calendar, Washington, like many of his contemporaries, simply kicked his birthday forward 11 days, from February 11 to February 22, and we have followed this convention ever since.

But it's apparently more complicated than that: History tells us that, according the Julian calendar, Washington was born on February 11, 1731, while, under the Gregorian update, Washington's birthday was reckoned as February 22, 1732. This probably has something to do with the fact that, under the Calendar (New Style) Act, the year 1751 began on March 25 (the traditional New Year's Day on the Julian calendar) but ended on December 31.

Now -- you may ask -- what does any of this stuff about Washington's Birthday have to do with the Paczki Day Fundraiser for the Polish American Association? And the answer, obviously, is not a whole lot.

Except that, this year, since the observance of Washington's Birthday and Ash Wednesday coincide, one need not have to observe the latter in order to indulge in Paczki Day the day before: Any excuse for pastry will do.

And, in this case, a paczki purchase will support the work of the Polish American Association: The PAA provides a comprehensive range of bilingual and bicultural services of all kinds to Polish and other diverse immigrant and refugee communities in need of resources for changing lines.

The PAA is offering three options for this fundraiser:
    The Fat Tuesday Mixed Dozen ($48), which includes a mix of:
  • Semi-tart fresh apple filling with powdered sugar dusting
  • Traditional apricot filling with a sweet glaze
  • Rich Bavarian Cream with powdered sugar dusting
  • Homemade custard filling with chocolate frosting
  • The Carnivale Mixed Dozen (also $48), which includes a mix of:
  • Homemade cherry preserves with a sugar glaze
  • A tart lemon mousse filling with a sweet glaze
  • Rich raspberry filling with glaze
  • Fresh strawberries with whipped cream and powdered sugar topping, or
  • The PAA Special Low Fat Mix (any amount you choose), which includes:
  • No paczki... but is
  • Healthy for the waist and the soul
  • Supports programs
  • And is a charitable donation
Paczki orders must be received by no later than noon on Saturday, February 18. An order form is available at this link.

Pastry pickups begin at 8:00 a.m. on Fat Tuesday, February 21, at the PAA's northside office, 3834 N. Cicero.

For any questions about this fundraiser, contact Susanne Beddell at susanne.bedell@polish.org or Sonji Jones at sonji.jones@polish.org.

Monday, January 09, 2023

February 5 program: The Green Book CLE and Solidarity Awards

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center will open an exhibit on February 2 entitled "The Negro Motorist Green Book."

A few days later, on Sunday, February 5, from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m., a consortium of six local bar and judges' groups will present a lecture by Dr. Adam Green, who serves on the faculty of the University of Chicago in the Departments of History and Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity, on The Green Book, Plessy v. Ferguson, and the Civil Rights Act. The lecture will follow self-guided tours of the exhibit. One hour CLE credit will be available for lawyers attending (diversity credit is pending).

The program will also feature the presentation of Solidarity Awards, awards to be conferred jointly by all six sponsoring groups. The identities of the awardees is expected to be disclosed later this week.

The six organizations jointly sponsoring the February 5 program are the Black Women's Lawyers Association, the Cook County Bar Association, the Decalogue Society of Lawyers, the Illinois Judicial Council, the Jewish Judges Association of Illinois, the North Suburban Bar Association, and the Women's Bar Association of Illinois.

The Green Book was created, and updated annually for many years, by Victor Green, a Black postal carrier from Harlem. The exhibit at the Holocaust Museum was created by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in collaboration with Candacy Taylor. The Smithsonian Institution has an online Green Book exhibit where readers can get a sense of what can be found at the exhibit at the Holocaust Museum. A quote from the online exhibit:
The Green Book would not have been possible if not for the community of self-sufficient, talented, and successful Black businesses that filled its pages.
Tickets for the February 5 CLE event and awards presentation are $35 for adults and $20 for children. Sponsorships are also available. A Gold level sponsorship ($100) includes two adult tickets and printed recognition in the program materials; a Platinum level sponsorship ($250) includes four adult tickets, verbal recognition at the event, social media publicity, and prominent recognition in the program materials. Both event tickets and sponsorships are available at this link. For more information about potential sponsorships, email wbai.cle@gmail.com.

Saturday, January 07, 2023

Film Premiere at the Illinois Holocaust Museum on January 19: "The Devil's Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes"

I have to do another post about an upcoming event at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center, and I will, of course, but this upcoming event caught my attention along the way:

On January 19, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center will host the North American premiere of The Devil's Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes (trailer here).

The Devil’s Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes unearths secret recordings of Adolf Eichmann, one of the chief architects of the Holocaust’s Final Solution, which definitively shows his active involvement in the planning and implementation of one of the greatest atrocities in world history. Recorded in Buenos Aires in 1957 by Dutch journalist and former SS-Officer Willem Sassen with the intention to prove the Holocaust did not happen as portrayed and without Hitler’s knowledge, these tapes show the opposite and expose Eichmann, in his own voice, stunningly contradicting claims he made during his eventual trial for crimes against humanity, war crimes, and crimes against the Jewish people. The Devil’s Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes sheds light on the hidden forces that concealed the recordings, altering the arc of history as we have understood it for more than 70 years, and provides irrefutable proof against Holocaust denial and the pernicious antisemitic hatred from which it springs.

Originally premiered as the opening film of the renowned documentary festival DOCAVIV (and released as a documentary series on Israel’s TV-network KAN 11), MGM Television, SIPUR, Toluca Pictures, Alice Communications, Menemsha Films, and the Illinois Holocaust Museum will bring a feature-length version of The Devil’s Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes to North America, beginning with its January 19 premiere in Skokie.

A reception, starting at 5:15 p.m., will precede the premiere. The screening will be followed by a distinguished panel discussion with Director Yariv Mozer, Executive Producer Emilio Schenker, and world-renowned Holocaust experts Dr. Michael Berenbaum, of American Jewish University, and Dr. Peter Hayes, Professor, Northwestern University. The discussion will be moderated by Richard Salomon, Vice President, Museum Board of Directors. Opening remarks will be given by Steve Stark, Chairman of Toluca Pictures, former President of MGM Television, and Executive Producer of the film.

Co-sponsoring this premiere with the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center are the Illinois Film Office, the JCC Chicago Jewish Film Festival, Am Shalom, Chicago-Kent School of Law Centerfor National Security and Human Rights Law, Temple Chai, the Consulate General of Argentina in Chicago, and the Decalogue Society of Lawyers.

To register for this event, click here.

Clarence Darrow offers CLE in upcoming CBA presentation

For many years Clarence Darrow was comfortably ensconced as the second-most famous lawyer to come out of the State of Illinois. Then Barack Obama dislodged him.

But Darrow is still in there pitching, providing CLE for the CBA on Wednesday, February 2, from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m., at the Union League Club.

Well... not actually the real Darrow... but Paul Morella, an actor with a one-man show that features reenactments of some of Darrow's best-known courtroom moments laying, in the words of the event promoters, "the foundation for an examination of the ethical issues raised during the performance, including conflicts of interest, jury nullification, dishonesty, misrepresentation, fraud and more."

Sadly, the promotional materials don't address whether Morella will specifically address Darrow's guilt or innoncence in the California jury-tampering case that almost ended Darrow's career some 110 years ago. (There is some serious question about whether Darrow may have actually been guilty of those bribery charges. But that's the great thing about history: It is populated by flesh-and-blood people, just like people in the present day, people in possession of great attributes... with coexisting great flaws... and who may be, or should be, worthy of respect and admiration, those human defects notwithstanding.)

Tickets for this event are $100 each for CBA members (CBA Advantage Plan members have to pay full price for this event). The non-members price is $150. Registration is available via this link. Organizers say that attendees will qualify for 1.5 IL PR-MCLE credit.

Friday, December 09, 2022

CBA to present Korematsu reenactment on Thursday, December 15

Fred Korematsu in 1998
The Chicago Bar Association D.I.C.E Committee, the Young Lawyers Section of the CBA, and the Japanese American Bar Association of Chicago are partnering to present a program on Korematsu v. United States on Thursday, December 15 from 4:00 – 6:00 p.m., at the CBA building, 321 S. Plymouth Ct.

The link in the preceding sentence is not to the 1944 Supreme Court opinion (that "shameful precedent," as Justice Sonia Sotomayor called it in her dissent in Trump v. Hawaii, 138 S.Ct. 2392 (2018) (see, p. 92 of the linked .pdf document)) but, rather, to educational materials published by the U.S. Courts.

Those materials note that, while Fred Korematsu's conviction (for violating an exclusion order by the military) was overturned in a 1983 case (he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill Clinton in 1998), "the Supreme Court decision still stands."

That flat assertion might come as a surprise to the Supreme Court justices who heard Trump v. Hawaii. In the majority opinion in that case, Chief Justice Roberts stated, "Korematsu was gravely wrong the day it was decided, has been overruled in the court of history, and---to be clear---'has no place in law under the Constitution.' 323 U.S., at 248 (Jackson, J., dissenting)." And, as alluded above, in her dissent, Justice Sotomayor stated, "Today, the Court takes the importantstep of finally overruling Korematsu * * *. This formal repudiation of a shameful precedent is laudable and long overdue."

This seeming digression into Trump v. Hawaii is relevant because the materials for next Thursday's program, which were drafted and provided by the Asian American Bar Association of New York, includes commentary at the end from Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Sotomayor. I may have given some of that away here.

The program will feature CBA members reenacting key moments from Fred Korematsu’s trial and fight for justice. During the presentation, participants will examine key areas of the law involved in the case.

Korematsu was born in the United States but was arrested for his Japanese ancestry and for refusing to comply with military orders. During World War II, Japanese Americans were regarded as a threat to U.S. security and were uprooted from their homes to remote internment camps in the West.

However, Korematsu took a stand for his rights as an American-born citizen and brought his case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court rejected his claim that the relocation of Japanese Americans during the War was based on racial bias.

For additional information about this program or to register to attend, visit this page of the CBA website.

Thursday, March 03, 2022

Initial thoughts on the occasion of Mr. Madigan's indictment

FWIW readers can access the 106-page indictment against the former House Speaker by clicking here.

At least that's the plan. If my techological skills have once again failed me, readers can nevertheless find the indictment by following links from yesterday's press release from the United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Illinois.

The gentleman at right is not Mr. Madigan, of course.

He is in fact General George B. McClellan, one-time Commanding General of the U.S. Army, the Democratic nominee for President in 1864, and, until yesterday at least, the figure from history who most reminded me of Michael J. Madigan.

McClellan built and shaped and nutured the enormous Army of the Potomac out of eager, but raw, volunteers. He had remarkable skills in logistics: McClellan's troops were well-supplied, well-equipped, well-drilled -- but they were hardly ever used.

If only McClellan had been chief of staff to a better general, one who knew how to use the machine McClellan made for its intended purpose of restoring the Union, McClellan might be regarded today as among the greatest heroes of the Republic. But it was not to be: Even when he had in his hands Lee's written deployment instructions for the invasion of Maryland (Special Order 191), the best he could do, at the Battle of Antietam, was fight Lee to a draw.

Madigan built a great army, too. Two great armies, perhaps: His supermajority in the Illinois House of Representatives and the army of volunteers and staff that delivered votes for that supermajority. Madigan was either the greatest cartographer of our age or he showed great managerial skill in recognizing and promoting cartographic talent in others. Either way, he deserves credit for the Illinois legislative maps that were drawn. In 2014, for example, when Bruce Rauner won 50.3% of the vote and was elected Governor of the State of Illinois (carrying every Illinois county except Cook), Madigan retained a 71-vote supermajority in the Illinois House, just more than 60% of the total membership, on only 50.49% of the statewide party vote.

Any candidate recruited by Mr. Madigan for a House district worked that district, door-to-door, day in and day out, long, long before any votes were cast. Madigan candidates (and their handlers) took extensive note of what their would-be constitutents wanted, and what they feared, and then (at least according to his critics) preyed on those fears in endless mailings, tying the opposition candidate in any way imaginable to those fears. These tactics turned many "no" votes into no-shows and many "maybes" into yeses. It didn't always work -- but it worked often, and for a long time.

Madigan knew the rules. He wrote many of them, starting with his participation in the Constitutional Convention that produced our current Illinois Constitution.

But how did he use the machine he built?

Illinois went without a budget for the first three year's of Bruce Rauner's gubernatorial term. And, yes, it is the Governor's responsibility, not the House Speaker's, to craft and submit a balanced state budget. But Rauner came into office with an apparent lack of knowledge of the workings of state government. He seems to have thought he could somehow actually "fire Madigan" (as the chants went at Republican rallies). I wrote in 2016, when the state marked its second anniversary without a budget, that Illinois had become a "national joke." I suggested that Mr. Madigan (and then-Senate President Cullerton, who also had a veto-proof majority) should have taken matters in hand and used their supermajorities to pass a veto-proof budget. Another year went by before that happened.

At the time I wrote about it, it was pointed out to me that Madigan's "supermajority" only existed on paper. He couldn't count on some votes on many issues, and perhaps he would lose many votes on some others. But isn't that where leadership and vision and maybe even compromise can come into play? What good was a supermajority if no attempt was ever made to use it? As Lincoln kept asking, what good was the Army of the Potomac if it always stayed in camp?

McClellan's soldiers initially loved "Little Mac." They were fed and fit and alive.

The problem was that army camps, in the Civil War, were actually more dangerous, ultimately, than battlefields. Twice as many Civil War soldiers succumbed to death from disease as from bullets, shells and bayonets.

Was that what happened to Madigan's army, too? Did corruption seep into Madigan's camp like disease into an army camp?

Until yesterday's indictment, I thought that Madigan failed to use the great power he accumulated because he lacked a plan, or vision, of what to do with that power -- and also becaue he lacked, as McClellan lacked, confidence in the judgment of others about how to use that power. And on this latter point perhaps not entirely without reason: Rod Blagojevich, for example, was no Lincoln.

But now the United States Attorney suggests another, and altogether tawdry explanation: The machine was not idle. It was used. But only for individual gain. For money.

If the U.S. Attorney is correct, a number of Madigan's cronies were active participants in a criminal enterprise headed by Madigan himself. But McClellan had many good officers who acquitted themselves well under subsequent commanders. Mr. Madigan had a number of good people working for him, too. Dedicated public servants. Interested in what was best for the State. If the allegations of the lengthy indictment are proven, these good people were poorly served. But, then, so were we all.

Thursday, October 07, 2021

Did Confederate die-hards start the Great Chicago Fire? New book suggests they did

Currier & Ives lithograph obtained from the Chicago Historical Society

Tomorrow marks the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the Great Chicago Fire. Although it is an event so important in our civic history that it merits one of the four stars on the Chicago flag, it is also shrouded in myth and mystery.

And maybe this is so for a very good, and hitherto unsuspected, reason: To paraphrase Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men, perhaps we can't handle the truth.

That's a conclusion you may come to if you read a new book by Robert P. Hillmann, The Great Chicago Fire: The Southern Rationale.

Full disclosure: I've known Bob Hillmann since we were both history majors at Loyola University in the 1970s and I can vouch for his assertion, in the book, that it was many years in the making.

A goodly portion of the book is devoted to an utter demolition of a number of popular understandings of the fire. Mrs. O'Leary, and her cow, and Peg Leg Sullivan are all exonerated. What is compelling in Hillmann's step-by-step, moment-by-moment account, drawn from original sources, is the conclusion that there was no one Chicago Fire; there were many. And windblown embers or flying, flaming timbers did not kindle these many fires, or certainly not all of them: The immediate eyewitness testimony suggests that many buildings caught fire from within -- and in a pattern that had nothing to do with documented wind patterns.

And, yes, we all know that the Water Tower did not burn... but the nearby Water-Works (which should have supplied water to fight the fires) did. And it was supposed to have been fireproof.

Once you realize that there were not one, but many Chicago Fires that erupted on the evening of October 8, 1871, a number of uncomfortable questions arise.

To ease into this... back when I was representing insurance companies in fire cases I learned that multiple points of origin are indicative of arson. As it is with suspicious residential fires, so it is with burning cities. But... if all of these fires... or even if only some of these files... were set, who were the arsonists? And if the facts, then as now, pointed to arson, why did the authorities gloss over these facts, spreading malarkey about cows and hurricanes instead?

Hillmann's book suggests some new, intriguing, and very unsettling answers.

We all think of the Civil War ending when Lee met Grant at Appamattox Court House in April 1865. That's the way it was taught in school. But Joe Johnston was still in the field when Lee surrendered, as was Kirby Smith. The Juneteenth holiday commemorates the Federal reoccupation of Galveston, Texas (a full two months after Lee handed over his sword). The Rebellion did not end neatly or suddenly; it sputtered out here and there and (based on personal observations during a 2015 driving trip through the South) in some places maybe not at all.

And at least two types of Reconstruction followed. Andrew Johnson's personal Reconstruction policy allowed all the Rebel leaders to remain at large (even Jefferson Davis spent no more than a couple of years in custody). Though the "Radical" Republicans could and did overturn his equally lenient political settlement, requiring, if only for a brief time, the Southern States to allow Black votes and accept Black elected officials, the persons most implacably opposed to Congressional Reconstruction were free to work -- and work together -- to undermine it.

And, as Hillmann's book makes clear, the political and military leaders of the failed Rebellion had more tools at their disposal than sympathetic Democratic politicians and editors in the North. The Confederates had developed an extensive secret service during the war years, operating out of Canada, and arson was a favorite tactic for their covert operators. And Southern arsonists used a particular type of incendiary, referred to as "Greek fire," after the legendary superweapon of the Byzantines. The similarities in properties between these documented Confederate incendiary devices and incendiary devices discovered in Chicago after the Great Fire provides some important circumstantial evidence for Hillmann's hypothesis of Southern involvement.

And that's not the only evidence Hillmann offers -- but you may want to read about it yourself. Among the questions you may ask: What was P.G.T. Beauregard hoping to give President Grant on that train? An olive branch? Or a threat? Both?

We can never know for sure whether the Great Chicago Fire was really a die-hard Confederate werewolf operation. It's an explanation that fits a lot of the facts -- although not all of them, certainly. There were two other massive fires in the Midwest at the same time, one in Peshtigo, Wisconson, and the Great Michigan Fire. By some measures, both of these other fires were worse than the Chicago Fire. But the Southern Rationale checks a good many boxes. Hopefully Hillmann's new book will spark (if I can use that word here) further academic inquiry.

What we do know for sure is that the political will to support Reconstruction began to fade well before the disputed presidential election of 1876. Did the vulnerability of northern cities to organized bands of die-hard Rebel arsonists contribute to that erosion of political will? The abandonment of Reconstruction lead to 90 years of Southern White Supremacist domination in Congress and 90 years before the Reconstruction Amendments acquired any meaningful statutory teeth. The surrender of the promise of Reconstruction, for mere partisan advantage, is a matter of national embareassment, which continues to damage the nation today. If part of the explanation for the failure of the political will to support meaningful Reconstruction was capitulation to terrorist threats---if we shifted the blame for the Fire to poor Mrs. O'Leary's cow to preserve a fragile peace, at the expense of the nation's Black population---our national shame is even greater.

But, as my mother used to say, tell the truth and shame the Devil. The way forward requires looking back honestly. And accurately. And it may require looking South.

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

On the teaching of history: How would you introduce Someone Special to strangers?

I hope everyone who sees this post has at least one Special Someone in their lives -- a parent or grandparent, perhaps, or a spouse or a child.

As you think carefully about this Special Someone, you will have to admit that he or she is not perfect -- only God is perfect, you may think, if you ever think about those things. If your Special Someone has been on this planet for any length of time, he or she may have a Past. He or she may have once said things, or done things, that you find objectionable. You may recall your disappointment, and maybe even your anger, when you first discovered that your Special Someone may have harbored attitudes or even engaged in actions some time ago that you find unacceptable today. Perhaps your Special Someone has repudiated his or her life mistakes; perhaps your Special Someone has not entirely owned up to some of the questionable, or even downright bad, things in his or her past.

But that Special Someone, for all his or her faults, is still precious to you. Why? Because the many good qualities of your Special Someone, in your view, overcome and overshadow his or her past and present missteps and failings.

Now... how would you introduce your Special Someone to strangers? How would you teach people about your Special Someone? Would you start by dwelling on all his or her faults, all his or her failings, and all the times he or she had failed to live up to your expectations? Would you focus on every bad thing he or she did, and every bad thing he or she said? Before saying one nice thing about your Special Someone, would you first insist on explaining every occasion on which your Special Someone had said one thing and done another?

Well, that might be the approach you'd take -- if you wanted those strangers to despise and maybe even hate your Special Someone. So -- obviously -- you would instead introduce your Special Someone by stressing the good qualities of that person, the things that made that person special to you in the first place. You would not hide or ignore the past failings of your Special Someone -- were you to try such a tactic, once your audience got to know your Special Someone, at least some of them would figure out your Special Someone's imperfections and your credibility would be damaged -- but you would not lead with these flaws and, when you did introduce them, you might do so in a way that would help strangers to understand how your Special Someone overcame, or is working to overcome, these past errors of omission or commission and how your Special Person grew from his or her mistakes.

So it should be with the teaching of American history to children.

The United States of America is a flawed nation, of course -- but all nations, like all human things, are flawed. However, unlike nearly every other nation in the entire world, America is a country not founded on shared blood but on a radical, world-altering principle, namely, that all persons are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, and that, among these, are rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. America has not always lived up to the ideals expressed in the Declaration of Independence. Hey, a great many of America's Founders could not accept the real-world implications of this radical notion, the principal author of the Declaration, Thomas Jefferson, most prominent among these.

There will be time, after children are exposed to the historic events surrounding the development of this principle, and its adoption by the Second Continential Congress, after they have imbibed deeply of this world-shattering concept, to reveal the many times that our nation failed to live up to the promise of the Declaration of Independence, starting with the Founders' own failures. Learning about our past mistakes will not keep us from making new ones, but it may, and should, help us not to repeat old ones.

And American history is not a story of just one Special Someone. The nation's history is the cumulative story of its leaders, and all its citizens, some heroes, some villians, some persons embodying both hero and villian at the same time. Read any of Robert Caro's books on Lyndon Johnson, for example. And the best part is that the story keeps changing, keeps getting richer and more interesting. At an April 29, 1962 White House dinner honoring Nobel Prize winners, President John F. Kennedy said, "I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent, of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered at the White House – with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone." Of all the Founders, I can't think of any who has fallen farther or faster in public esteem in my lifetime than Thomas Jefferson. No serious politician would dare lavish such praise on Jefferson today. Bottom line: there is no 'one' American history.

A great story almost always has a flawed hero. And there are a great many flawed heroes from which to choose when telling the tale---the many tales---of America's history. But the heroes' flaws and failings should help the student to see the their triumphs and successes as that much more spectacular.

I do not advocate a Parson Weems or Disney Princess approach to teaching American history. There is good and bad in all humans and in all human things. In our eagerness to confess our faults, however, let us not lose sight of our accomplishments. As my mother used to say, tell the truth and shame the Devil. But tell the stories -- teach the stories -- in a way that helps our children and grandchildren learn to appreciate our special country, what it has been and what it can be.

Thursday, March 11, 2021

Gonzales case may answer the question of shills in judicial races

Some readers get aggravated with me from time to time, and never more so when the subject is "shills."

I accept the possibility that, perhaps, now and then, this candidate or that one has entered the lists at the behest of another candidate -- statistics show that, for example, in general, a male candidate will be disadvantaged in a one-on-one race with a female. But... maybe... if the male candidate can recruit one or two other women to enter the race -- just enter the race, without campaigning -- sufficient votes may be divided between or among the female candidates to allow the male candidate to slip through.

That's the theory, at least. In practice, it doesn't work out so well.

In a comment submitted to FWIW on a post last year, Dr. Albert J. Klumpp, a research analyst with a public policy PhD, and the author of several scholarly works analyzing judicial elections, stated that his research disclosed 33 instances of probable shill candidacies in countywide circuit court contests between 1994 and 2004. He found that "there were instances where a ringer meant the difference between victory and defeat for a slated candidate. But the success rate was less than 25 percent. So it’s no surprise that there were none after 2004. Benefits didn't justify costs."

I'm not positive that there haven't been any shill candidacies in countywide judicial races since 2004 -- but I am dead certain sure that there haven't been nearly as many as charged.

In the last election cycle, Injustice Watch ran a story (published also in the Chicago Sun-Times) calling out a number of alleged "shills" by name. I ran a lengthy response here. (See also, Wait... I thought shills weren't supposed to have lawn signs... and Guest Post: Bonnie McMgrath responds to Injustice Watch story on shills.)

The bottom line is that, as employed in recent years, the accusation of being a "shill" is just another campaign slur, like "extremist" or "Trumpite" or "lizard person."

OK, I haven't actually seen a mailer accusing a Cook County judicial candidate of being a lizard person. Yet. But I wouldn't be at all surprised.

And "shill" is a particularly good slur to bandy about because it is intended to injure at least two people: The candidate who is allegedly the shill and the candidate who recruited the shill. And the implication is that both the recruiter and the recruited have done something illegal, immoral, or fattening.

Gonzales v. Madigan, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 6635 (No. 20-1874, 3/8/21), does not resolve the morality question. But Judge Easterbrook's brief, tart opinion leaves little doubt that the use of shills is not illegal.

Jason Gonzales challenged Michael J. Madigan in the 2016 Democratic Primary for state representative. Also on the ballot that March were Grasiela Rodriguez and Joe Barboza. Quoting now from the Gonzales opinion (slip op. at p. 2),

Gonzales contends in this suit under 42 U.S.C. §1983 that Rodriguez and Barboza were stooges put on the ballot by Madigan’s allies to divide the Hispanic vote and ensure Madigan’s victory. The effort was hardly necessary, since if every non-Madigan vote had gone to Gonzales he still would have lost in a landslide. Nonetheless, Gonzales contends, the appearance of two candidates who served only as distractors violated the Equal Protection Clause in the Fourteenth Amendment and entitles him to damages (perhaps represented by the expenses of his failed run).

Dismissal of the suit was upheld because, even if the other two Hispanic candidates were recruited by Madigan (who denied any such thing), the alleged "sponsorship" was no secret. Quoting again from the opinion (slip op. at p. 3),

Gonzales smelled a rat from the start and made that known to the electorate, which swept Madigan back into office anyway. An editorial in the Chicago Sun-Times agreed with Gonzales about the provenance of the Rodriguez and Barboza candidacies, so the voters did not have to take his word for it.

Gonzales relied on Smith v. Cherry, 489 F.2d 1098 (7th Cir. 1973), which, according to the new Seventh Circuit opinion (slip op. pp. 2-3), "held that a stalking-horse candidacy, in which the nominal contestant secretly planned to withdraw after winning the primary and permit a party commitee to name the candidate for the general election, could in principle violate the Equal Protection Clause." The Gonzales court describes Smith as "a bolt from the blue. It does not have any predecessors that we could find. Nor has it had any successors" (slip op. at p. 5).

I'd have thought, reading Smith, that its predecessor was Shakman v. Democratic Organization of Cook County, 435 F.2d 267 (7th Cir. 1970), which the Smith court quoted for the principle, "The interests of candidates in official treatment free from intentional or purposeful discrimination are entitled to constitutional protection" (489 F.2d 1098, at 1103, quoting from 435 F.2d at 270). Shakman isn't just a predecessor of Smith: Though now over 50 years old, the case is still pending (see, Shakman v. Clerk of Cook County, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67626 (opinion by Magistrate Judge Schenkier)).

Michael Shakman was a young lawyer when he sought election to Con-Con -- the same Constitutional Convention at which a young Michael J. Madigan got his start in electoral politics.

Shakman ran from a district that included Hyde Park, where he had attended law school.

In 1969 there were few places within the corporate limits of the City of Chicago where the legendary Machine of Mayor (and, more imporant, Cook County Democratic Party Chairman) Richard J. Daley did not hold sway. But Hyde Park was one of these. Even Mr. Shakman admitted, in this 2008 interview for the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, that the Machine could not "reliably dominate" the district from which he ran. In fact, as the interview reveals, Shakman got through the initial round of voting to be elected as a delegate. There were four finalists, independents Shakman and civil rights activist Al Raby, and the "organization" candidates, Attie Belle McGee and Odas Nicholson (later a Circuit Court judge). Raby and Nicolson won. Shakman finished third.

Shakman's claim, that he was constitutionally disadvantaged by the patronage armies of the Daley Machine in Hyde Park, must have seemed as implausible to the District Judge initially assigned to that case, Arbraham Lincoln Marvoitz, as Jason Gonzales' claim, that Michael J. Madigan needed to recruit ringers in order to win, seemed to Judge Easterbrook. But a panel of Easterbrook's predecessors reversed Marovitz.

Anyway, it would appear that Cook County judicial candidates are free to recruit shills if they think it will help their prospects. Which it probably won't.

Besides, if "just run" is deemed a plausible and even potentially successful campaign strategy, how the heck would you be able to tell a shill from anyone else?

And Gonzales won't stop people from accusing some candidates of being shills. But I don't have to repeat baseless accusations here.